Stereotypical smart mouth, racist, big city cop--but with a SympatheticPOV, which makes all the difference. Almost always written as a noble, misunderstood "good guy" (or girl). This could give the impression that the writer(s) are downplaying bigotry--or, in a passive aggressive way, justifying bigotry in certain situations--to the point of making "loyalty" to "your own group" a virtue, thus making lack of bigotry come across as CategoryTraitor.

Sometimes this guy is shown as honestly mistaken and will [[CharacterDevelopment moderate]] his bigoted views over time. This will often involve him coming into close contact with the group that he hates, possibly even being partnered with one of them.

The "noble" part frequently takes the form of not allowing his prejudices to interfere with police work--you won't see him charge a black guy with a crime he knows he didn't do. Is almost always white, but can also be of color. The ethnic version exist for the character to [[BoomerangBigot critique their own gender or race]] without the writers worrying about being called racist. Kinda like a inversion of NWordPrivileges by proxy.

Subtrope of--obviously--NobleBigot. Usually a PoliticallyIncorrectHero.[[noreallife]]----!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Anime and Manga]]* Huang of ''Anime/DarkerThanBlack'' is a FantasticRacism version, but certainly looks the part, being a cigar-chomping, hard-drinking, overweight, JerkWithAHeartOfGold.* Toshio Wakagi of ''Manga/CodenameSailorV'' comes off as this in his hostility toward Sailor V... [[JerkassHasAPoint Who, in all fairness, is a vigilant involved in some shady business]]. Once he finds out the truth he actually becomes her FriendOnTheForce.* Tetsu Ushio from ''Anime/YuGiOh5Ds'' starts out this way, being discriminatory to Satellite citizens who are viewed as Neo-Domino City's trash. Since there is an established law that people from Satellite are prohibited from entering Neo-Domino City without permission, Ushio tries for a good quarter of the first season to arrest Yusei for exactly that. However, he does care for the safety of Neo-Domino City's citizens and he would apologize for things he did when he was brainwashed. His mind changes when he helps out in one of Satellite's orphanages. He completely changes to a noble officer from season 2 onwards.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]* The DC Universe has Detective Harvey Bullock; like Sam Vimes, he HatesEveryoneEqually. (Except for Franchise/{{Batman}}, who he hates just a ''little'' bit more)** In the DCAU, he hates Batman because he's a "freak", who's hogging all the investigations.* Lieutenant Burke from ''ComicBook/SandmanMysteryTheatre'' probably qualifies.* Subverted, played straight, lampshaded and deconstructed in ComicBook/TheQuestion #15.* Officer Pete "Shock Headed Peter" Cheney of ''ComicBook/TopTen'' is extremely hateful of robots, largely referring to them with the offensive FantasticSlur "clicker." The ''Forty Niners'' prequel features Adam "The Spirit of '76" Pure, who hates robots, vampires, and everyone who isn't white (excepting vampires) -- though these were much more popular sentiments in 1949.* Deconstructed in ''ComicBook/TheShadowHero''. Detective Lawful, the FriendOnTheForce of the protagonist, the superhero the Green Turtle, denounces Chinese people in general in a moment of frustration, in a racially abusive manner. The Turtle is furious and reveals that he is Chinese-American himself, and Lawful is ashamed and sincerely apologises.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film]]* Jack Moony from ''Film/HeartCondition''. Subverted in the end though, because of a heart transplant from a black man, who ended up [[GhostlyAdvisor staying around]] to make Moony see things differently.* ''Film/TheProposition'' Morris Stanley gives people the SadisticChoice, beats up prisoners, discriminates against Irish people, is a bit blunt on the whole imperialism thing, and doesn't trust his wife with information that might upset her. The thing is, it's all out of a misaimed sense of duty and chivalry, and he's not really a bad guy, underneath it all.* Police officer John Ryan from ''Film/{{Crash}}''. He starts off as just plain bigoted, then gets slightly more noble while the film does it's best to make itself the unfunny version of Avenue Q's "Everyone's a little bit racist."* Although he doesn't have a sympathetic POV, Officer Coffey from ''Film/BoyzNTheHood'' is a very provocative take on this. As he's a black officer that shows apathy, and hostility towards his own race. Arguably a double subversion being that he was black and wasn't depicted as noble.* Similarly, the black drill sergeant Calhoun from the HBO film ''Film/FirstTimeFelon'' is arguably given a SympatheticPOV. He despises the black juvenile felons because he hates that when "white people look at me, they see you instead...I love black people, but I ''hate'' niggers." He [[StopBeingStereotypical hates the stereotypes that they help perpetuate of decent black people like him]]. He despises the felons so much he intentionally undermines their rehabilitation by provoking them to hit him. He even goes as far to say "I'm never gonna let you get released back on the streets! I'm gonna lock up your children, and their children's children!" The character can definitely be interpreted and dissected in many different ways.** An AlternateCharacterInterpretation is that he's an embittered cynic who doesn't believe in redemption.* Henry Oakes from ''Film/{{Narc}}'', for several reasons; not the least of which is that his "daughter" is actually a girl he had rescued from her sexually abusive father, after putting her in a squad car and [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown beating the ever-lovin' shit out of her dad]].* Variant: Detective Spooner from ''Film/IRobot'', whose prejudice against robots gets him involved in a mysterious case...** Though this isn't so much ''hating'' robots as simply [[DoesntTrustThoseGuys not trusting them]]. It's also largely [[SurvivorGuilt justified]].* Variant: small town Police Chief Gillespie (Creator/RodSteiger) in ''Film/InTheHeatOfTheNight''. At the beginning, he seems the stereotypical obnoxious, racist redneck, but - also thanks to Steiger's Oscar-winning performance - slowly emerges as a decent (if bitter) man who befriends the black protagonist, Virgil Tibbs. It helps that Gillespie is shown to be significantly ''less'' bigoted than most of the rest of the town.* The police officers in ''Film/SlumdogMillionaire'' hate lower class Indians and use ElectricTorture as a matter of course. However, after the protagonist doesn't confess under torture, they start believing him and are even somewhat helpful.* Sergeant Gerry Boyle, the main protagonist of ''Film/TheGuard'' is this in spades. He makes outright racist comments at a briefing ("I thought only black lads could be drug dealers. And Mexicans) and believes Americans to be overly idealistic. However, when his rookie partner's wife informs him that her husband is missing, he goes out of his way to solve the case. Even when [[CorruptCop every other guard in the area has been bribed to stay out]].* ''Film/{{Philadelphia}}'' has Joe Miller, a lawyer version of this trope. He is ([[CharacterDevelopment at first]]) homophobic but agrees to help a gay man with AIDS sue his old employers for discrimination because such discrimination is against the law.* Gleb Zheglov in ''Film/TheMeetingPlaceCannotBeChanged'' is a notorious CowboyCop who, while not given to a prejudice, is nevertheless essentially a vigilante with a badge, having no qualms of opening first and planting the evidence to put the notorious thief behind the bars, circumstances be damned. It is even more pronounced in the [[FilmOfTheBook original book]], where he verges on a SociopathicHero. * Subverted in ''Film/DarkBlue''. Detective Eldon Perry sees himself as one of these, being a casual racist who catches bad guys. Others, including several black cops, point out that he's just a vile scumbag who abuses his power.* As the page quote shows, [[Film/DirtyHarry Harry Callahan]] is one. He's very [[HatesEveryoneEqually equal opportunity]] in his hate.* ''Film/TheUntouchables'', Jim Malone isn't shy about sharing his anti-Italian prejudice, though George Stone earns his respect.* Subverted in ''Film/SuperTroopers'' with Foster. He swings by the police station with some important files and seems adamant about giving them to a ''male'' police officer rather than Ursula. It turns out the folder is empty and he was asking for the males because she's the only female police officer and he wanted to make sure no one else was around so he could [[DoggedNiceGuy try and romance her.]]* ''Disney/{{Zootopia}}'': Despite his overt hostility towards the token bunny protagonist Judy Hopps who was put on the police force for political reasons, Chief Bogo genuinely cares about helping the [[FunnyAnimals animals]] of Zootopia. [[spoiler: The real twist is that Judy herself is [[InnocentBigot carrying some pretty bigoted ideas]] about predators herself.]]* A sci-fi twist in ''Film/AlienNation'', with Matt Sykes. As the film opens, he's merely annoyed by and contemptuous of Newcomers. Then, when his partner Tug is killed by one in "Slagtown," his casual bigotry becomes full-on hatred. It begins to dissipate when he comes to like and respect George, the Newcomer cop he requests to be partnered with so he can solve Tug's murder. By the end, the two are friends as well as partners, and Matt's view of Newcomers has improved considerably.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]* ''Literature/{{IT}}'': In the first 1984/1985 segment of the narrative, the cops interrogating the young men that assaulted Adrian Mellon, a gay man, throwing off a bridge and into the Derry canal to his death (at the hands of Pennywise), would love nothing more than to see the local gay bar close its doors for good. However, they react with anger and disgust at the brutal way in which Mellon was beaten and they look forward to throwing the book at the three punks who did it.* Sam Vimes from the ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' books may be considered one of these. Vimes is more a misanthrope than a bigot, though he's occasionally described as being biased against ''everyone'', regardless of race or species.** This is played the most straight with him in ''Discworld/MenAtArms'', when the Watch first takes on a troll, a dwarf (apart from Carrot, who's [[ObliviousAdoption only a dwarf by adoption]]), and a w[[spoiler:erewolf]], and he's not best pleased. He doesn't do much except act surly in their presence, but since he complained to Carrot, who doesn't really understand keeping secrets, it doesn't stay a secret for long. But he seems to change his perspective soon enough; by ''Discworld/{{Jingo}}'' he's pretty much friends with Angua and Detritus.** He genuinely seems to hate vampires but that's more about class than a matter of species. Vimes especially despises members of the [[BlueBlood upper classes]] who abuse their power by [[AristocratsAreEvil exploiting others]] and [[MoralMyopia taking the fruits of their labor without giving anything back]]. Vampires represent everything he's ever stood against.*** As of ''Discworld/{{Thud}}'', he lets a vampire join the watch though, [[spoiler:and lets her stay on even after she's revealed as a spy]].*** Mainly because at first, he is forced to take her on, and after the fact because if he plays it right, no-one will be able to tell him who he takes on ever again. He then wonders if Vetinari thinks like this all the time.*** And by ''Discworld/{{Snuff}}'', he has at least two vampire officers on the force.** As mentioned in a throwaway line in ''Discworld/UnseenAcademicals'', he's also employed a medusa. [[TakenForGranite She has to wear sunglasses]]. Really, the fact that people don't find too much to complain about in this is all you need to know about Ankh-Morpork.** Vimes tends to see two kinds of people, Watch officers and non-Watch officers. If you are part of the latter, then he mistrusts you, with only a few exceptions - he mistrusts most races - but if you are part of former, ''that'' is your race, in his eyes.** An interesting aspect of ''Discworld/{{Jingo}}'' is Vimes's reaction to ''genuine'' racism. His Klatchian counterpart points out that Vimes refused to consider a Klatchian could have been the killer, because that was the sort of thing men like Rust would have thought. "Be generous, Sir Samuel. ''Truly'' treat all men equally. Allow Klatchians the right to be scheming bastards, hmm?"** Similarly, in ''Discworld/{{Snuff}}'', Vimes' reaction to the casual racism against goblins is to treat the goblins with all the care and respect he shows to any other victims of a crime. He even asks about the name of the deceased without thinking about it, which impresses the goblin chief since most humans refuse to consider that goblins have names.** Fred Colon is intended as a parody of this trope.*** The difference between Fred and Vimes is highlighted in ''Discworld/TheFifthElephant''. Fred makes bigoted comments about nonhuman officers during the book, and it upsets the nonhuman officers because of it. However, Vimes has been known to make similar comments, but they tolerate it from ''him'' because they know that when things get dicey Vimes has their back, where Fred is a usually-LovableCoward.* Fat Ollie Weeks from Creator/EdMcBain's ''Literature/EightySeventhPrecinct'' novels.** Likewise his {{expy}}, Ollie Chandler, in Randy Alcorn's books. Chandler softens up a lot more quickly, though.* Pretty much every non-corrupt cop in the ''L.A. Quartet''.* Played with in ''Empire of the Wolves'' with Jean-Louis Schiffer. A retired police officer and somewhat of a legend (albeit rather sinister one) among his colleagues, Schiffer is extremely knowledgeable about Parisian minorities and is apparently on speaking terms with community leaders. At the same time he gleefully spouts racist slogans and is not averse to using JackBauerInterrogationTechnique on the suspects. The reader (and Schiffer's rookie partner, Netreaux) is not really sure what to make of him [[spoiler: until the end, when he is revealed to be deeply corrupt, serving as a middleman in heroin distribution. He is killed by his courier who has gone rogue and took off with a large shipment and whom Schiffer was tracking down throughout the novel.]]* Soledad O'Rourke of ''[[Creator/JohnRidley Those Who Walk in Darkness]]'' and ''What Fire Cannot Burn'' fits this trope to a T, and is the reason given for every one-star review of the former book on Amazon.com as of this writing. She's described as a "good cop" for her honor and devotion to her work, but even her sidekick considers her to have fallen beyond redemption, due both to HeWhoFightsMonsters and the fact that the "freaks" she hunts ''aren't'' AlwaysChaoticEvil.** The other [=MTacs=] are more moderate examples, with the character Bo in particular actually being a normal human being shown prone to introspection and a life outside of killing things, while Soledad has nothing in her life except killing [[DifferentlyPoweredIndividual mutants]] and her boyfriend [[spoiler: and later, [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs trying to kill her mutant boyfriend]]]]. The normal police officer doesn't even manage that level of noble, either.* On those occasions when Imperials in the StarWarsExpandedUniverse are portrayed as something other than a bunch of not-really-Imperial people who switch sides immediately, they fall into this trope. Admiral Pellaeon might be the best example, both before and after the truce. One of the authors in the Literature/NewJediOrder gave him an extremely {{Narm}}-ish tract crudely connecting his governing style with gardening, and how one must weed and pinch errant buds.** Played with interestingly with Baron Fel, in that his bigoted beliefs are the ''reason'' he ultimately leaves the Empire. He starts out believing all the Empire's notions of human supremacy, that humans have the right to rule the galaxy and the duty to look after the "lesser" species for their own good because they're the advanced race. This lasts until he takes part in a battle where the alien admiral [[TheChessmaster Thrawn]] creates the strategy that led the Empire to victory. Faced with this evidence that humanity is not, after all, a superior species, plus the Imperial bureaucracy's subsequent attempt to downplay Thrawn's role, Fel concludes that the Empire is based on a lie and loses much of his faith in the system, which makes it easier for him to defect later. * Braxton Underwood, a minor character and newspaper owner in ''Literature/ToKillAMockingbird'', is said to be unable to stand black people and unwilling to let them anywhere near him. Nevertheless, he respects Atticus (even while disagreeing with his decision to defend a black man) enough to have his gun ready to defend Atticus when a lynch mob comes for his client (albeit without making his presence known until after the threat has passed) and all but condemns Tom Robinson's conviction and the shoddy nature of his trial in his newspaper on principle.* [[SpacePolice Adjudicator]] Roz Forrester in the Literature/DoctorWhoNewAdventures. She's a black woman who is totally [[FantasticRacism prejudiced against aliens]], but also one of the few Adjudicators in Spaceport 5 who actually makes any effort to help them.* ''Literature/InDeath'': Lieutenant Mills from ''Judgment In Death''. He is white, male and heterosexual, as well as being a fat slob. He doesn't like anyone who is not white, not male, or not heterosexual. He is not all that "noble", even though he did say something about his dead fellow cop Kohli was good at his job, even if he was black. [[spoiler: Later, Mills gets murdered, and it turns out that he was a DirtyCop who wanted money]]. So much for "noble".* Literature/AnitaBlake can be viewed as a FantasticRacism version of this. She hates vampires but will not blame a vampire for a crime he did not commit.* Plainclothesman Elijah Bailey of Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Robot'' series hates robots but will enforce the law even if it means protecting them. His views are changed when he is partnered with a robot, R. Daneel Olivaw.* Rafael de la Cruz from ''Literature/{{Hometown}}'' is a tireless, hard-working, conscientious sheriff who cares deeply for his community. He is also a good father...and he considers it his duty, as a good father, to ensure that his daughter has no further contact with her lesbian best friend. Who knows what happened during all those sleepovers over the years?* In David Simon's ''Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets'' he discusses one cop who ran an entire African-American family through the police databases after they moved in next door, yet was diligent in his pursuit of any murderer, regardless of the race of the victim. Simon portrays it mostly as about pride; they're not about to let a little thing like their own blatant racism get in the way of proving their smarts.* In the later books of ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'', some of the [[DoesNotLikeMen Red Ajah]] members are portrayed more like this, viewing men (and male channelers) more sympathetically than the Reds portrayed earlier in the series (while still not necessarily ''liking'' them), [[spoiler: especially after Saidin is cleansed, and the Red Ajah's entire purpose needs to be reevaluated.]][[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]* In ''Series/BabylonBerlin'', Bruno Wolter is the resident DirtyCop (not that the rest of the force a lot better), but also shown to be a loving husband to his senile wife.* FBI agent Seeley Booth in ''Series/{{Bones}}'' is generally a nice guy with no apparent bigotry, but he displays contempt toward the [[BondageIsBad BDSM]] and [[BasementDweller Fantasy Role-Playing]] subcultures, as well as [[BlackMagic Voodoo]] practitioners (although the Voodoo episode treated the religion realistically and avoided HollywoodVoodoo.)** Bones herself (technically not a cop, but acts as Booth's partner in the field) often shows bigotry toward religious people, particularly Catholics. Note, however, that Booth is Catholic, so she clearly bears no ill will toward them—it's more a matter of general insensitivity. She is also extremely contemptuous of psychologists/psychiatrists, even though she works with one.* Det./Sgt. Andy Sipowicz from ''Series/NYPDBlue''.** Who was an {{Expy}} of Det. Norman Buntz of ''Series/HillStreetBlues'' (both played by Dennis Franz)* Speaking of ''Series/HillStreetBlues'', Howard Hunter had frequent moments of this, much to the frustration of Ray Caitano.* Agent Doyle of ''Series/TwentyFour''. Seemingly a bigoted, arrogant, stuck-up, ends-justifies-the-means agent who won't take crap from anyone and isn't afraid to make things physical if they disagree. Has also secretly covered up honest mistakes and screw-ups of his co-workers to make sure they don't get hot under the collar with their ObstructiveBureaucrat superiors, and admits he's spiritually lost. He also later [[ScrewTheRulesImDOingWhatsRight defies orders]] when he realizes it's the right thing to do, and encourages his superior to do the same.* Officer Maurice "Bosco" Boscorelli from ''Series/ThirdWatch''.* ''Series/{{Life On Mars|2006}}'' comes with a rather good selection of these, Gene Hunt being the star.-->'''Gene:''' Now. Yesterday's shooting. The dealers are all so scared we're more likely to get Helen Keller to talk. The Paki in a coma's about as lively as Liberace's dick when he's looking at a naked woman, all in all this investigation's going at the speed of a spastic in a magnet factory. (Sam drops his radio) What?\\'''Sam:''' Think you might have missed out the Jews.** Illustrated well in [[Series/LifeOnMars2008 the American version]] when he learns that the murder they're investigating may be a homophobic hate crime and still refuses to treat it with anything less than his usual "professionalism", calling out Ray for suggesting otherwise.* A rare, non-white male example: Det. Frank Pembleton of ''Series/HomicideLifeOnTheStreet'' (Though he was more an intellectual snob than racist)* Detective Sergeant Jimmy Beck from ''{{Series/Cracker}}''.* Dets. Stabler and Tutuola from ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'', while not especially racist or sexist, tend to be...less than fans of the LGBT community.** Fin learned later he has a gay son, which softened him somewhat.** They're both interesting cases in that they don't outright hate members of the LGBTQ community; they just don't really understand much about it. As mentioned above, Fin softens up after learning that his son is gay, and Stabler has become increasingly tolerant after repeated interactions with various members of the LGBTQ community.*** Fin especially, being how culturally conscious as he is, knows the dangers gay men face, especially in minority communities, and clearly doesn't want that added pressure on his son's life, along with being a black man. * Since the show is, in many ways, a procedural, Series/{{House}} is like this, with "badge" replaced with medical license. On top of being generally misanthropic, he makes crude racist remarks--despite his background and linguistic abilities being quite cosmopolitan.** House is bigoted against ''everyone''. Racist, sexist, pick an -ist. He just doesn't like anyone, including himself. The times he makes racist and sexist remarks usually come across as him trying to push people's [[BerserkButton buttons]].*** Cameron, of all people, explicitly [[{{Lampshade}} lampshades]] this in one episode, telling him that she knows he's "a misanthrope, not a misogynist."* Sgt. Troy of ''Series/MidsomerMurders'' might count- granted, he's a young guy rather than a grizzled hard boiled type, but he is notably close-minded in his views (especially towards homosexuals), but is a nice guy regardless.* ''Series/{{NCIS}}'':** The episode "Designated Target" showed Tony [=DiNozzo=] as uncharacteristically hostile toward African immigrants. It [[CompressedVice hasn't been mentioned much since then]] but he does still tend to get a little politically incorrect when trying to get under a suspect's skin.** [=McGee=] once made a remark about Italians and the mob, only for the Italian Tony, who was ''right there'', to call him on it.* ''Series/RescueMe'':** Not cops, but otherwise fits pretty much the entire cast. [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iliNaspGVDg At sensitivity class]]:--->'''Franco:''' See, that's another thing. Puerto Ricans, we get shafted even when it comes to racism. Chinks got what, like four ethnic slurs? We get one-- spick. That's it. The Irish they got mick, patty, donkey. The Italians they got guinea, wop, dago.\\'''Sean:''' Yeah, and spaghetti-bender.\\'''Franco:''' Ah, spaghetti-bender went out of style during Sinatra's first marriage.\\'''Mike:''' Greaseball.\\'''Franco:''' Yeah, greaseball. There you have it; that's four.\\'''Tommy:''' That's great. Same thing with the Jews, right? Heeb, kike, Jew boy, Benny.** Later...--->'''Tommy:''' ...Let me tell you somethin' the next time I run into a burning building and refuse to bring out anybody who's not the same color as me, then that's when you can bring my angry, pink, sober, Irish, a* back down here. Got it?* Detective Sikes from Series/AlienNation.* A medieval version, King Uther from ''Series/{{Merlin}}'' with his "all magic users are evil" outlook. No actual badge here, but he *is* the king.* Hank Schrader, the SympatheticInspectorAntagonist from ''Series/BreakingBad'', has a habit of stereotyping his subjects and making somewhat, shall we say, politically insensitive remarks, particularly about Hispanics and poor people. When judged by his actions rather than his words, however, he is a good cop and a heroic man who is supremely dedicated to fighting crime and protecting his friends and family. Ironically, his two closest friends on the force (and quite possibly in the world) are Hispanic and black, the former of whom laughs off his racist jokes most of the time.* During his time on ''Series/LawAndOrder'', Detective Mike Logan would frequently make remarks that could variously be described as xenophobic, Islamophobic, homophobic, and disdainful or mocking of religion in general, and he was openly disrespectful to Lieutenant Van Buren during her first few episodes because of his sexist attitude toward female police officers (and especially female brass). During his final episode on the show, however, he publicly coldcocks a gay-bashing city councilman (and probable murderer) for claiming they are NotSoDifferent. When he finally returned for ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'' years later, this aspect of his character was dropped entirely.* Lieutenant Provenza on ''Series/TheCloser'' is very politically incorrect (sensitivity training bounces off him like rain on a raincoat) and usually makes plenty of inappropriate remarks. He is also a good cop who takes his job seriously.* In ''Series/{{Supergirl 2015}}'', Hank Henshaw is shown to have a distrust of aliens, though he is willingly to work with Supergirl to bring in more dangerous criminals. [[spoiler: Then again, the real Henshaw wasn't so noble and is dead, and the "Henshaw" Supergirl's been working with is the ComicBook/MartianManhunter and hence this is a disguise.]]* ''Series/InspectorGeorgeGently'': Detective Sergeant Bacchus is this in a HatesEveryoneEqually fashion, but ultimately always does the right and sees justice served, no matter who the perpetrator or victim are. He is also a chauvinist and does not think women belong in the police in generall, and especially not in CID.* For reasons of DeliberateValuesDissonance, ''Series/RipperStreet'' has Bennet Drake, who is somewhat homophobic (he gets better). And of course lots of other, minor police characters who are varying levels of racist or sexist. This serves to emphazise how much ahead of his time Inspector Reid (and Jackson) is on most social issues.* ''Series/MurdochMysteries'': Especially the early seasons often set up a dichotomy between conservative (''mildly'' racist, homophobic, sexist, etc.) Inspector Brackenreid on the one side, and progressive, liberal Dr. Ogden on the other, with Detective Murdoch in the middle. Though over the years, Brackenreid's attitude has improved a lot. Also, even Murdoch himself, for all that he's very polite and by instict [[IdealHero always leans to the side of least human misery]], was initially judgmental about homosexuality and women who had abortions, because he couldn't square these things with his Catholic faith. But he got over both prejudices quickly enough once faced with people who were actually affected.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':** Ashley Williams, although less in the sense of hatred than a refusal to completely trust or rely on them. She appears to have her reasons for disliking aliens, as her grandfather was commander of the Shanxi garrison during the FirstContact War, and her whole family was blacklisted in the military as a result. She also apparently spent next to no time in space, and was forced into planetary garrison duty on safe, human-populated worlds, so she's had no contact with aliens prior to joining Shepard's crew. If the player is feeling indifferent to the topic of aliens, she'll get over her issues on her own.** Garrus starts out as this as well, demonstrated especially by his tendency to make YouAreACreditToYourRace statements to Wrex and Tali.* Rusty Galloway in ''Videogame/LANoire''.* Knight Captain Cullen in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'' is strongly opposed to granting freedom to the mages, but he's also the first templar to show mercy to them if they deserve it. By ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition'', [[CharacterDevelopment it's clear that he's regretful of the bigot part]].* Reggie Rowe of ''Videogame/InfamousSecondSon'' openly regards Conduits as threats to society (generally referring to them as [[FantasticSlur Bio-Terrorists]]) and thinks of his brother Delsin as infected with a disease of sorts when he first gets his powers. Nonetheless, he can be convinced to give them a chance and is generally helpful (if somewhat reluctant) when it comes to Delsin.[[/folder]]